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The mathematician of the Complutense University of Madrid, José-Vidal Ruiz Varela, argues that Europe must raise its borrowing limit, leaving its deflationary policy. Meanwhile, USA must correct debt and raise the interest rates. Raising the interest rates in the USA and dropping them in Europe, recovers the European domestic demand and EE.UU may return to invest in Europe, with a stronger dollar, without any problem, generating hundreds of thousands of Jobs

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch)Orders for durable goods posted the largest drop in December since midsummer as demand for big-ticket items fell almost across the board, raising questions about whether businesses are really ready to ramp up investment after a down year in 2013Durable-goods orders sank 4.3% last month, the Commerce Department said, while November’s strong gain was marked down to 2.6% from 3.4%Economists polled by MarketWatch had expected a 1.8% increase in ordersThe surprising decline appeared to stem from a quirk in how commercial-aircraft orders are calculated, economists say. Boeing reported a huge bump in contracts for new jets — to 319 from 110 in November — but the government’s numbers were seasonally adjusted to show a plunge in orders“We had expected the overall value of commercial aircraft orders to be unchanged, but it turns out the adjusted figures show a 17.5% decline,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital EconomicsAnother big drop in orders occurred in the auto industry, as expectedAutomakers offered sweet deals at the start of the holiday season in November to drum up sales, leading to fewer purchases in DecemberOrders for autos dropped 5.8%Even if autos and aircraft are factored out, however, orders still slumped 1.6% in December and demand was particularly weak for high-tech goodsAnd orders for core capital goods — a stand-in for general business investment — declined 1.3% to mark the fourth reversal in the past six monthsThe softness in orders casts doubt on whether businesses will boost investment in 2014, a key ingredient for faster economic growth. Many economists predict this will be the year U.S. reaches or exceeds 3% GDP for the first time since 2005, the longest stretch of subpar growth since the Great Recession in the 1930sMore reassuring was the relatively small drop in shipments of core capital godos They fell just 0.2% after a 2.3% surge in NovemberWhile orders can be canceled, shipments reflect actual goods produced and delivered to customers